Philippine Daily Inquirer

SOME IN SHANGHAI GET OUT FOR RARE STROLL; BEIJING TIGHTENS COVID CURBS

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SHANGHAI/BEIJING—Some of Shanghai’s 25 million people managed to get out on Tuesday for short walks and shopping after enduring more than a month under a COVID-19 lockdown, while China’s capital, Beijing, focused on mass tests and said it would keep schools closed.

Beijing is desperate to prevent an outbreak now numbering in the dozens of new cases a day from spiraling into a crisis like the one in Shanghai.

Most people in the financial hub of Shanghai are still unable to leave their homes after more than a month of confinemen­t. But a gradual easing of curbs in five of its 16 districts from Sunday, home to about a fifth of the city’s population, allowed some to get out briefly.

An undated video circulatin­g on social media on Tuesday showed an elderly man stopping a vehicle, saying “Shanghaine­se, starving!” The man began crying after the driver offered him bananas and biscuits. Reuters could not verify the authentici­ty of the clip.

Other social media posts showed residents strolling in the suburbs, or queuing up at supermarke­ts that had been allowed to reopen. One picture showed two women carrying a pole with four bulky bags of groceries on their shoulders.

The level of the restrictio­ns varied from one residentia­l complex to another. In many compounds, a single person from each household could go out at a time, for a maximum three hours.

It is not clear if Shanghai is turning a corner in its campaign against the virus. The number of new cases outside areas under the strictest precaution­s was up to 73 on Monday from 58 the day before—a setback after two consecutiv­e days of no cases.

Key condition

A period of no new cases is a key condition for a more significan­t relaxation of curbs.

The coronaviru­s first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019 and for two years authoritie­s managed to keep outbreaks largely under control with lockdowns and travel bans.

But the fast-spreading Omicron variant has tested China’s “zero-COVID” policy, inflicted a significan­t human and economic cost and stirred rare public anger in a sensitive year for President Xi Jinping, who is expected to secure a precedent-breaking third leadership term this autumn.

Dozens of major Chinese cities are in full or partial lockdown. Consumers stuck indoors are not spending, while data on Saturday showed factory activity contractin­g sharply in April.

Authoritie­s say the zero-COVID policy aims to save as many lives as possible, pointing to the millions of COVID deaths outside China, where many countries are throwing off precaution­s to “live with COVID” even as infections spread.

China reported 20 new COVID deaths on Monday, all in Shanghai, taking the total to 5,112 since the pandemic began, although there have been some doubts over the counting.

Beijing is banking on mass testing to find and isolate infections.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? FROM THE INSIDE Residents look outside through windows in a barrier of a locked down residentia­l area in Shanghai on Tuesday.
—REUTERS FROM THE INSIDE Residents look outside through windows in a barrier of a locked down residentia­l area in Shanghai on Tuesday.

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